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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1871-188? | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1875)
G 0 0 o 0 n THE EjJTEnPniSE. OREGON CITY, OREGjk APR, 16, IS75. The Questional Economy. ,r This is a" subject of tbe most im portance, and yet the least under stood of all the sciences. We speak of domestic, social and political economy. And yet the 'words are a mockery in the vocabulary of -our language. Whilst they have a text ual rendering, tho daily application is a mockery to all pretentions. As we view the checkered ways of life, and the inconsistency of the hetero geniotfs mass, does not the question press itself upon the mind -with ir resistible force and Almost audible tones, saying what is economy? The lexicon gives an easj' solution, but the experience of life contradicts this textual definition at every turn. We preach economy and practice prodigality. But again we hear the words repeated what is economy? The answer comes it is the rule of o right. But wiiat is right? Again the nnswer is given, it is tho rule of conduct rendering the greatest good to the greatest number. Or more definitely stated; it is the rendering of good to all. But this is not ex actly republican or ecclesiastical, for at the head of modera social scienco stands the deformed and hideous features of selfishness. It looms up in all onr social and domestic rela tions. We find the skeleton of fraud incthe palaces of the rich and in the hovels of the poor. Its illgained, de formed and ghastly features are in every nook where more comely scenes should exist. But there is no use of dwelling on glittering gener alities. Facts call for plain words to illustrate prevailing wrongs . and needful reforms. It is not economy to charge more that a fair value for our labor or the product of labor. It is not economy to remain idle one half the time hop ing for unreasonably large wages the balarce of tho time. It i3 not ocon omy to drive worthy labor from us by unreasonable terms or unbear able associations. Those who havo the welfare of their homes at heart, ,-will employ those who contribute of their earnings to support our schools and churches, our business men and mechanics, and by the fruit of whose industry there will by built hundreds of h omes from whhjh emanate the genius of American life the germ of a higher civilization. Economy gives well tilled farms, industrious mechanics, generous merchants, humane manufacturers and honest daily toihirs in the vari ous pursuits of lifej It gives all this, and gives mo.c. It insures health. It imparts pleasure. Its blessings aro peace and good will and its fruits jirosr-eri ty. But all th does not solve the mysteries of fceonomj-. There is no explication in organized associations and individ ual life does not harwmize the irre pressible conflict. IV hat shall wo do? The most direct Viiswer is be gin'at the bottom. Society is but an association of individuals. Every person is a factor of the whole. If the factors are all right, then the body will be right also. If one member be halt, the whole body will be deformed. C-ae drop of im purity will discolor a glass of water. The purity of the water depends on the purity of every component part. It is so with society A Therefore, tho 0 ancient proverb Kn w tnysell was M K . - - a wise one. ty) Let us philosophise. We will endeav- ' or to so polish our facts that there can be no immediate danger jof mor tal injury for this is a fastideous age. In childhood we are robbed of our individuality and self dependence by stern, positive and regulative commands. We are made slaves to our parents without a reason and the expanding mind rebells. From this school is graduated the youthful hoodlums of the age. Children should not be robbed of their indi viduality. They should be taught self reliance. They should be taught to know the right and to do it for its own sake. This would be true econ omy, and quite the reverse of the usual customs of society. Wtness - a single picture. Little Pet wishes to visit aunt Sarah, she approaches mamma saying: " Please ma may I go over to aunt Sarah's. little while;'" The mothep replies with that terri ble monosyllable, " No." V But ma I want to so much." " But you can't go to-day." Why can't I go to-day?" c.j Because you can't." ' But ma, there is t-o school to-day and ray work is all done, and why can't I go?" " Because you caa't. Now stop your teasing." And so the poor little inquiring ,g nxmd is doubly rebuffed at every ap peal Would it not have been much better for the mother to have' reason ed! with the child, and thereby edu cate ami strengthen its reasoning faculties, and thus teach it self con trol. Gould not the mother have . said, " I shall be quifee busy to-day, you would be such a help to me,-but if you go away I shall feel so- lone "some, , Would it not be so nice for my little Pet to stay with her mam vina to-day?" With t few cheering words of this kind, alopted to the facts in the case, the child would be left to its own choice, and would re main at home of its own free voli tions, instead of a stern command that marred the happiness of all dur ing tho balance of the day. This appealing to the judgment and showing your confidence in them and their choice of the right, is what we call domestic economy. The song bird will have a happy home in a family thus governed. But there is another reform sadly needed. It is making slaves of toil ing millions. It is that hideous monster fashion. How many hearts have been made sad, and how many homes ruined by the invasion of the destroyer. Mrs. Ply ugly wears a beaver hat and all the world must follow. How few men or women have self dependence enough to say: 'I have clothing quite good enough, it was fashionable last year, and will be fashionable with me till it wears out." Seriously, clothing can make a difference with those only who have nothing else to recommend them. A little more brain culture would give us less fashion gossip, and more of the social, homelike, in dustrious and intelligcst qualities of social economy. But politics, also, has its votaries, and the aspirant for party honors is quite blantant over the virtues of his party. We have learned this from the experience of the past fifteen years. A multiplicity oi omces nave SOT been created for tho benefit of the happy family. Economy -directs the discharge of all supernumeraries, the placing of a well guarded lock on the public treasury, the cutting down of all salaries to mechanics wages, and the reorganization of an honest govern ment. We want but few offices less laws, more honesty and a happy peo ple made so by being governed by the economy of right. In finances so closely allied to every relation of life, there is a wider range for the application of economy Suffice it to say that tho gatherers of wealth are themselves but factors of tho whole. Tho successful business man gathers the waste in community. Tbe principal belongs to the comnm nity from which it has been taken, and should be devoted to the public good. Take the man with 3100,000, he has gathered it by a few years close dealing. It was gathered from the surplus earnings of those who dealt with him. With this money he builds a costly mansion and en joys it all himself. The money is lost to the world, and so far as the world is concerned, might as well bo sunk in the depths of tho ocean. It is true that the building and fur niture gave employment to a score of men for several months, but that is no equivalent. The public good demands more. It requires a resto ration of what has been taken from it. It had no surplus capital to do vote to sucli selfish and useless pur poses. Had the money been devoted to the manufacturing interests, it would have given employment to a hundred mechanics, and supplied a arge district of country with agri cultural and other employments, and thus satisfy a great demand. And, what is more, the employment of the mechanics would not have been for a few months, as in the erection of the residence, but would have ex tended through a period of unnum bered years. One appropriation might be styled true economy the other selfish prodigality. But enough has been said. We plead for home industry and the patronago of home manufacture and home pro ducts. We plead for every needed reform that our homes may be homes of peace and plenty. Shall onr pleadings be in vain? Going Down Under It, nere is what a Washington cor respondent of the New Orleans Times says about President Grant: "The President has already chang ed in two years. His face is red, ap proachincr at times to purple, with aDorjle'ctio threatening, and, it looks argue any thing, there are chances that the third-term question may be settled, if he changes not his course of living', by the sudden clip of Clo- tho s scissors. 'I see death in h face if he keeps this thing up thri months longer,' said a physician, whose name is eminent among th faculty in both hemispheres and re nowned even in the London College of burgeons, as we left the White House that evening." In addition to the foregoing, Gen. Jas. B. Steadman, a well-known Union officer, who was in the army with Grant, and whose knowedge of him is full and thorough, says: "If he does not die the victim of his appetite, he will cause his coun try more trouble, more excitement and more bloodshed than any man f flho has lived on this continent. In every position he filled in the army, he ga've convincing proof of his des potic characteristics in the unrelent ing bitterness he exhibited toward rivals. He could neither brook con trol nor rivalry, and thwarted in either, became unmanageble to such an extent as to excite alarm in Wash ington. The President has not appointed a single Radical Congressman to office nor any of their' friends, who voted against the Force Bill. The ques tion i3 asked by the people generally, did he not trv to buy the passage of this iafamous law with 'the public patronage? The answer plainly told in his acts. is very 1 Flax TmoMPndfi. rovs a writer on flax cultuie in the Bulletin, the best practical tracher, shows that, the most valuable products must have the best culture. Of two farmers who raise wheat, the one who tills best ana sows and harvests at the right time win get the best crop. It will pay bet ter to raise 400 or 500 bushles on ten i i mi-.. acres than on twenty acres. iutj soil and climate of Oregon offer the farmers choice to raise forty to nity bushels per acre or twenty to twenty five bushels per acre. The wheat from fields of largest yield per acre has the finest berry and commands the highest price. It is better to raise fewer acres and better tilled. This analogy holds good in flax. The gentlemen who have seen the flax culture of England, Ireland and Belgium the latter being noted for the best culture and the finest fibre affirm that the climate and soil of Oregon are equal and. in some re spects superior to those of tho coun tries named, and. if there is failure of a good crop it will be due 'to lack of labor in the cultivation, or of skill and care in securing the crop, or to some error in selecting the land for flax. Last year some of the gentlemen who raised it for the fibre, having arrived late and engaged the ground in Winter, made mistakes. Some acres were of the light colored, clayey, flat land, that baked hard, on which flax would not grow. Such spots are not fit for wheat, or oats, or anything, until subd rained and subsoiled. But rolling prairie, like Howell's or parts of Tualatin Plains where deep plowing and frequent harrowing pulverize the soil for a good wheat crop, promise to be the best for flax.' Too much cannot be done to make a deep, fine, meaty tilth, as if you were preparing for an onion bed. Every clod of dry lumx is an injury and a loss. Spend more time on fewer acres. You cau afford it for a crop so valuable in market You do not wish to raise the cheaper or coarser flax, such as comes mostly from Russia. . The selling prices vary in Great Britain from 123 to $300 per long ton of 2,240 pounds. You can raise flax of the highest value as well as yon can rasse wheat of the highest value for that market. You have this advantage of climate, as intelli- Having prepared your ground by Fall plowing once, and Spring cross plowing, and thrico harrowing, you can sow in the earJy or muldlo Of April or before May. You may ex pect showers in May, which will be needed to start the flax well. You will have more or less dry weather afterwards, in May or June, which will bo needed for growth. July and August will bo dry months. which will give you tiie conditions for harvesting, steeping and drying. Your flax will bo pulled or reaped quickly when tho seed begins to slightly tinge brown or tho foot of the stalk to change color The dry warm weather in August will warm your pond or ditch of still water, so that tbe flax will ferment, or steep, as it is called, quickly, say in 11 or 12 days. The cold rains in Ireland often defer this process till very late in September or October. When "retted" (rotted) you will in August havo warm days to dry the bundles quickly. You can then pile up in barns and brake and scutch or swingle at your leisure, m Winter tlays, and have a few tons of flax to sell the merchant in the Spring all the product of your own laboror you can join with neigh bors in erecting a breaking and scutching machine and put your flax into market in the Autumn. The flax harvest can be gathered before your wheat requires to be reaped, and thus you save a large per cent of time. This product requires labor and attention. But your gang plows modern harrows and rollers, broad cast sowers and reapers give you ad vantage over cheap labor countries. One gentleman says it will not pay to employ Chinamen at $30 per month and put them into flax fields. Put your own and your children's labor and skill upon it in the Summer and Winter and you will get the profits Strive to raise the finest fibre that brings the highest price. Its prepa ration and transportation are no more than for the cheaper. The amount raised on some acres in England and Ireland is 1,000 pounds per acre. But on the same land they average 32 bushels of wheat and even more. We ought to raise as much which will bring from $100 to 150 worth per acre. Mer chants will advance from 100 to S200 per ton for the flax, according to the value of the fibre, as soon as it is ready for shipment. Long fibre is the most valuable. It is a pleasant fact that Mr. Jessa Parrish, of Ma rion county, who has raised flax for seed in Oregon, and for lint in other States, is preparing to put in 100 acres for the fibre this year, and for seed for the next year. Other gen tlemen propose to test on a smaller scale. All well-wishers of Oregon's welfare will rejoice in the success of these enterprises. The Line. It appear that Pinch back is the dividing line between the true Administration Radicals and the soreheads. After Christianey had finished his speech it was rmarked that he had gone over to the Demo crats. Those in f.ivor of him and none others are to be Radicals. The party would be terribly in tbe mi nority. The nigger created the, Bad- ' ical party and it now appears that j he will divide I mote it be. and destroy it. So Clear Ideas Respecting Culture In Oregon. COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BrilKELEY, CALIFORNIA The Pivotal States. In a table giving substantially the full vote of the country, : the aggre gate, according to the full computa tion of the Albany Argus, falls short of the largest combined vote of the ' lxr 73 190 votes. Of this number of votes, 52,415 are scatter ed through the States of Iowa, Kan sas, Maine, Minnesota, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Vermont and Virginia, where they could not affect the re sult unfavorably to the Democracy, although they might determine the States of Michigan and Minnesota in their favor. The other 20,711 votes are located in Massachusetts and Wisconsin, and might determine both Sates for or against the Rad icals. Here, then, is a balance of power in four States which cast their electoral vote for Grant, sufficient to decide the result; and the aggregate electoral vote is 39. That the absent voters were disaffected. Republicans is evident from the fact that in olose elections they abstained from voting. That they wil favor a Liberal Demo cratic policy is evident from the fact that they cannot be brought to sup port the Republican policy of to-day. The Democracy, then, may gain 19 electoral votes or lose 23 votes by their action. In the latter case their electoral vote will be reduced to 195;. leaving to the Republicans 171 a Democratic majority of 24. Can this satisfactory majority bo reduced to a minority? That do dends upon whether a full Demo cratic vote can be polled in a few close btates. is there any reason why Connecticut should not poll as many votes for the Democratic nom inee for President in 1870, as it did for the Democratic nominee for Gov ernor in 18G8; and ought not Loui siana to do as well as it did on Gov ernor in 1872? These aro the closest of the States now Democratic; and there is no reason why both of these should not prove true. Oregon is not likely to be struck by a reaction ary wave, and Louisiana is now con ceded to be Democratic. This leaves only New Hampshire among the piv otal States; and while that State has sustained tho Democratic national policy, it will undoubtedly again be hotly contested. But with New Hampshire. Massachusetts and Wis consin against tho Democracy, the electoral colleges would stand , Dem ocratic, 190; Republicans, 170. This shows that with a vigorous campaign all along the line, and par 'ticularly in Connecticut, Indiana, and Louisiana, the result is assured But to carry the elections, it is nec essary to have an undoubted Demo cratic liberal and progressive policy, which shall inspire confidence throughout the entire opposition. The P. I). & . L. Railroad. A correspondent writing from Washington, under date of March 17th, has tho following further par ticulars in regard to the construction of the Portland, Dalles and Salt Lake Railroad: Some, three weeks ago an agent of JL.omlon capitalists arrived here for the purpose ci consulting with Col 11 1 .a v iuapman auu otner uregonians in relation to building the Portland, Dalles and Salt Lake Railroad. After a thorough investigation an careful inquiry tho agent, in behal of theprincipals,,signed an agreement to build the road, work to be com menced at an early day. The agree ment, which was drawn up by Sena tor Kelly, was telegraphed to Lon don Thursday last, and a favorable answer is hourly expected. It is tho intention to commence work at Portland and build the road up the Columbia, and thus relievo the coun try of the oppressive monopoly that controls that great highway of na ture. The English gentlemen who have embarked in this enterprise are the proprietors of extensive rolling mills, and in addition have abundant means at their command to carry one their projects. In addition to the aid already received by the company from the State of Orecon, tho people of that State and the Territoties of Idaho and Washington will be called upon to contribute in labor and ma terial a sum eoual to $200,000. The vessels brincinsr the iron will, on their return trip to England, be loaded with wheat. This will furn ish the farmers with much greater frcilities for getting rid of their sur plus wheat than ever before offered and it is thought that, owing to the impetus that will thus be given to all branches of business and mdus try, the $200,000 can bo raised with difficulty. I am confident that the road will be constructed, and, also that work will be commenced early the coming season. A Tkue SusniAKr. An exchange thus pithily summarizes Grant's Presidential record: "He has estab lished precedents which will vex us as long as the nation lives, and he has set an example which embraces all these blunders and crimes which the ruler of a free country should avoid. - He has wrought more dam age to the republican system in these six years than his successors can re pair in the next fifty, and by his principles and actions has done more to demoralize public sentiment and weaken public confidence in the sta bility of public institutions than al the trials and tyrannies of civil war, And with these credentials he has the magnificent impudence to aspire to a third term, and' there are fools and knaves who are willing to en courage and assist him in it . Stbokqee Claims. An exchange buj ss luul jrinciiuacK. 13 a man and 1 it. V A "I - 11. .1 - LI 1 - uruvuer, uui vjisey 13 a man and brother-in-law remarks the New York Tribune, arid since 1869, that is stronger claim. T A Capable President. In-, one respect, the New Orleans Picayune thinks that Grant is a capa ble President. He is capable of do ing almost any act that public opin ion could condemn. He was capable of making Kellogg Governor of Lou isiana; he was capable of making Simmons Collector of the Port of Boston; he was capable of appoint ing Murphy Collector of the Port of New York; he was capable of send ing to represent the country abroad as ministers and consuls a number of disreputable persons who were conspicuously incapable of perform ing any of the duties ., imposed on hem; ho was capable of entering he House of Representatives to lob by for a bill which was to make him dictator of four States, and of inter ceding in the Senate for a tax bill which was to augment the incomes of monopolies under pretense of in creasing the revenues of the Govern ment. After so many displays of this kind of audacity, it is to be sup posed that he is quite capable of ap pointing Williams Minister to Eng land. There would be a peculiar unfitness in this appointment which, no xloubt,' strongly recommends to the President's consideration. Wil liams is Attorney-General. In that office ho exhibited so thorough an ignorance of law, and so striking a disregard of personal and public rights that he established a claim on Grant to the place of Chief Justice of the Supremo Court. Tho very brilliant manner in which he sue ceeded in defeating his own side in the controversy with Spain growing out of the Virginius anair, has prob ably indicated to tho President that eminent incapacity for diplomatic service, which constitutes the most valid claim to a foreign appointment under the present Administration. We do not know that the President has yet intimated any intention of sending his favorite to represent this country at tho Court of St. James, but tho general opinion that the ap pointment will be made shows that the public understand and duly esti mate tho influences which operate on tho Presidential mind in selecting his friends and agents. If Williams were not conspicuously the most un tie man in the country for the partic ular place in question, no one would dream that he would be selected for it. In such a case his appointment would bo a surprise. As it is, it would be tho thing which everybody expects, whilst everybody would re gret and condemn it. A Minister who "Won't llcsign. The New York Nation publishes tho following letter from W. J. Still man, the distinguished author, artist and dijdomatist. It is a severe criti cism on Grant's Minister to the Court of St. James. The letter is dated, London, Feb. 22, 1875. I havo lived abroad under many regimes, and often had cause to blush for tho official representatives of my country for drunkenness, meanness, profligacy, ignorance, incapacity, ve nality; but until I lived under the protecting presence of Gen. Sehonck I have never had to deprecate, as an American, a connection with swin dling. I doubt if there is another civilized Government, the meanest under the sun, that would dare so to outrage the self respect of its respectable citizens as to compel them, year after year, to endure tho humiliation of seeing their representative protected by his official capacity from a crim inal suit, and hearing the head of their Government commonly and plausibly accused of participating in the swindle identified in its highest personalities with a mean and fra grant fraud. Every honest American in England runs the risk every time ho dines with a party of Englishmen of being made blush by an allusion to the Emma mine or Gen. Schenck, and he must blush in silence, for there is not one word that can be said in mitigation of the disgrace; whenever ho takes up a morning paper he may see that some beggared victim of Grant and Schenck has instituted a criminal action against the American Minister for complicity in a swindle, which but for his name might never have been a swindle at all, and would certainly not have been a successful one; that he can not go to his Minis ter's receptions with self-respect, or, if he went, meet there an English man who has any. That's the way we stand, and I wish that, since General Grant and his official advisers are lost to all sense of diplomatic propriety, every honest editor in the fXTnited States would hear our complaint, and re peat it till the whole country felt the shame. . Importance of Local Papers. The Salem Statesman of a recent date has the following on the im portance of sustaining the local pa pers, which is true and should be heeded by all who have an interest in either their county or town. It says: The local paper is an absolute ne cessity to the county and community where published, and to see that it is supported is the duty of every citizen. It is for their interest, and it is business to see that it is kept up. Tbe large city papers cannot supply the place of the home paper. That should be the first love of every man and woman, for with the paper is the locality identified. The paper gives the county and town where it is printed much of importance in the world, and gives in detail the local news, which cannot be gained by any other source. Every day's issue of the paper is so much local history, and the rise, growth and develop ment of the town and county can be measured and recorded only by the local newspaper, that is constantly gathering its items. People do not properly appreciate their home news paper too much by tho number col umns that it contains. The home paper at any price is the cheapest paperone can take, for in it, we re peat, is found information that can be obtained from no other source. A Sensible Woman. Some three years ago the editor of the Independent Dispatch, at Ukiah, Cal., died, leaving a widow with sev eral children to maintain. The wid ow took charge of the paper and has ever since conducted it with marked ability and success. The paper has been independent of politics, but re cently the " Independent" part has disappeared and "Democratic" plac ed in its stead. The paper will henceforth be known as the 'Demo cratic Dispatch. The following selec tions from the leading article of the fair editress, proves the genuineness of her Democracy: This fall the Democratic party en ters upon the contest which i3 to de cide its own fate, and the future prosperity of the nation. Overborne for nf teen years by the unscrupulous use of military force beaten by ad mitted fraud openly sustained and endorsed by the " administration held under by the systemized terror ism which has prevented fifteen States of the Union from exercising the right of uncontrolled suffrage debarred from deserving success by the illegal use of Government funds to corrupt and buy voters the grand old Democratic party has still sus tained itself against all opposition, maintained its organization, ' and rebuked the evils which it was pow erless to prevent. That it has thus preserved its vitality in due to the fact that its principles are those of constitutional liberty, and must be forever dear to the wants of the American people. Political guerrillas must be sum marily dealt with. Men who enter caucuses must bo made to under stand that their general desires must yield to the wishes of the majority. There must be no more bolters no more " independent" candidates. Men who enter a Democratic caucus must respect and abide by its decis ion. An "independent" candidate must be regarded as a party traitor as a man devoid of honor preferring his own advancement to the good of the party, or the welfare of the peo ple. Personal feeling must now be sacrificed, and self interest laid on tho altar of the party. We are about to enter upon no common contest. It is a struggle for the existence of our party the existence of the Union. Successful we must be; and everything must be done that will in the slightest conduce to success. Onr nominations must be faultless. The best men we have must be chos en. Talent, integrity and populari ty must be the qualifications of can didates. Inferior men with inferior claims must stand back and give place to those who can command the, suffrage of our people. Victory must be ours and to gain it our best men must be' placed in tho lead. Showing His Contempt. The President of the United States has an utter contempt for tho ex pressed wishes of the people. At the fall elections quite a number of Radical Congressmen were repudiat ed by the people in their respective States. Grant now shows them that while they havo discarded them, he proposes to provide for them at the public expense. It is stated that theso rewards are in consideration of tho vote these Congressmen cast for the Force Bill. Eight appointments of repudiated Congressmen havo al ready been made, which are as fol lows: GoJIove S. Orth, Minister to Aus tria. Horace Maynard, Minister to Turkey. James N. Tyner, Second Assistant Postmaster General. I). W. Gooch, pension agent at Boston. Christopher C. Shcats, Sixth Audit or. A. J. Ransicr, collector of in ternal revenue for the Second South Carolina district. L. Cass Carpen ter, collector of internal revenue for tho Third South Carolina districr. L. A. Sheldon, assistant United States counsel before Alabama Claims Court. It is well known, remarks tho Wathington City Sunday Herald, that some, and probably all of these po sitions, and others to be hereafter given, were promised before the vote on the Force Bill was reached, and in view of the fact that eleven votes would have changed tho result, the question naturallyj suggests itself whether corrupt means were not used to induce members to vote for tho Force Bill, and, if so, who it was that thus corrupted the representa tives of the people. The Connecticut Election. " The Dutch have taken Holland," and in the same way the Democrats have carried Connecticut. Connecti cut and New Hampshire are both old fogy Democratic States naturally, and while it is a great victory for the Republicans to carry one of them, as in the case of the recent election in New Hampshire, yet it signifies nothing for the Democrats to get in occasionally say once in fifteen years. Our Democratic acquaintanc es need not throw their hats over their nutmeg Congressmen, for when the election returns com to hand from that State we intend to show them that they have actually lost ground in Connecticut since last year. Wait and see. The above is from the Bulletin. Now don't hurt our jubilant feelings with those figures when you get them; please don't. It is said that figures won't lie, but if tho Bulletin editor attempts to prove what ho in dicates in the above extract, he will have to.prove that twice two are not four. The Democrats only double their representation in Congress, but we will wait for , those terrible figures which are to convince the public that the Democrats have lost ground in Connecticut. But, please, Mr. Bulletin, let us feel good just a little longer. You had your time on the New Hampshire election, now give us the same show on Connecti cut. -. Enlarged. The Oregon Granger has been considerably enlarged and improved in its appearance. ' ; SUMMARY OF STATU M-IW. Lebanon Lodge, No. 47 I. O. O Jr., has eiectea ALessrs. A. B. G I - and F. M. Morgan as ilfWof the Grand Lodge of Oregon. Albany Lodge No. 4 and Orgean Encampment No. 5, I. o. o. F will celebrate .the fifty-sixth anniversary of. Odd 'Fellowship in the U. S on Monday, April 2Gth, 1875, in an "8n. propriate manner. i An evening daily paper is to ba started at Portland. The first issue is to appear about the 20th inst Bnshwiler is announced as business manager. It is Mr. Arrigoni's intention to leave Astoria on the outgoing steam er, for the benefit of his declining health. We earnestly hope our friend will find that great desidera tum, and will return to Astoria with the boon he seeks. The Occident has changed hands, but Mr. A. still offers it for sale. Rev. Dr. E. R. Geary has accepted pastorage of the Presbyterian Church at Eugene City, andwill move hi family there next week. Five German families have moved on the Henry Black farm, near Can treville, which they bought last week. ........ In consequence of President War ren's contemplated trip to the Eat in early summer, the commencement exercises of Albany Collegiate Insti tute will be about a month earlier than usual, beginning on the 29th inst. Mr. Henry Fuller, who has just come over the mountains from Goose Lake valley, informs the Record that the winter there has been mild and stock have done well. The popula tion in that region has increased con siderably and the business of stock- " raising promises to be profitable. The great want of the people there is a regular mail, and they consider the want of it a great deprivation. The Democrat says: BluefTMosa, of Sweet Home, last Tuesday brought down to Albany a bag of gold dust which assayed 13. It was taken from the Manzanita bar, on the San tiam, a few miles above Green Horn. The bar is owned by John Cave and others, whom, we understand, will immediately go to vork in the con struction of a ditch and other im provements for working tbe mines. Governor Grover has appointed tho following gentlemen honorary commissioners of emigration to Ore gon: J. W. Knight, of Grand Rapid, for the State of Michigan; A. G. Al lan, for the Province of Otago, in New Zealand, and James Frazer, of Windsor, Canada, for the Province of Ontario, Canada West. The Yamhill Itejwter says: Gen. Palmer came over from Salmon river one day recently, and he reports a very bad streak of fortune upon him self. He had a large band of cattle in that country, out of which he lost 150 head during the winter. The General says a dead whaje, measur ing 50 feet long, washed into tho mouth of Salmon river a few dajs ago, aud it is likely- that there will be some whalebone in this part of the country now, judging from tho calculations that are being made. The Roseburg Plaindraler nays; Sheriff Livingston captured I).n Clark, a person who a short time sinco closed an engagement of four years service to the State, under tho management of Watkinds, at Salem. He has been making very free with other people's property, riding off horse belonging to Mr. Richard Thomas, of Oakland, ined before 'Squire He was exam Ellison, and bound over for the next term of court. ... A petition is circulating in Hill boro.iu favor of giving Miss Mary Brown the post-office at that place. The farmers of 'Ronton county havo formed a joint stock company for the purpose of building aarjje warehouse on the farm of Green li. Smith, on the bank of the Willamette. There are one hundred shares at 320 each, no one man being allowed over ten shares. - . L. E. Webster, a man forty-ono of Yircinia. years old, formerly where his parents now reside, and late of Myrtle creek, Douglas county, was examined a few days ago as to his sanity. After close examination he was decided insane, and ordored over to East Portland. The work on the Dalle's and Sandy wagon road goes bravely', on. Mr. John Marden, the superintendent, has some twelver-or fifteen men at work grading and clearing the road. As soon as. the, fine weather com mences carpenters and bridge build ers will make the canyon of the Co lumbia echo. - ' ' - The Sheiiff of Polk county reports that he was charged with the delin quent tax roll received from formed Sheriff and with tax roll of - 1874, amounting in all to $23,248 92; taxes now delinquent S2.SG7. 70.C Reports that ho assessed and collected taxes of persons omitted by the assessor, amounting to 2,500. Allowed Sher iffs commission on collectincr taxes. $224,35. ........ Mr. Bewley, the mail carrier be tween North Yamhill and Tillamook, reports about eight feet of snow on the summit of the coast mountains. The snow extends about eight miles and has to be crossed on snow shoes. The Astoriaa says: About 1,000 has been subscribed toward the road from Fort Clatsop to the Sea Side, and prospects aro fair for something being done in the matter at an early day. The O. S. N. evince a determ ination to assist the workv.". On last .Thursday the Marion Co. J udge examined a convict at the State Penitentiary, who was pro nounced insane by Dr. Richardson. His name is Smith, from Multnomah cqunty. This is the same person that stabbed Dr. Glass last winter. The Governor has appointed W K. Leveridge, Esq., formerlyof Sal em but now of San Francisco, honor ary commissionor of emigration to Oregon for the State of California. D. W. Dimick, of Elkton.'in com pany with another, gentleman, killed two large panthers last week. These animals have been making sad havoc oa tho sheep in that section of coun try. It is reported that there is no f3or in Tillamook county. O